I love the Internet. I love web apps. I love the convenience of not installing anything to start something. When you visit Wikipedia, everything is right there, no more steps needed! And so I get annoyed when some service asks me to register before I can begin to use it.

Daily to-do lists are generally of two types: a recurring list of repetitive tasks, and a new “today’s agenda” list. Daily Todo is great for the former. Go to the site, and in the provided box, just write the different tasks you want to accomplish every day. Daily Todo will turn it into a list with a whole week’s calendar for it.

The site will prompt you to fill a cover letter, personal details, a summary of the job, your work experience, projects you’ve handled, your education, and your skills. Finally, you can finish up by adjusting the look of the resume, which you can preview before downloading a PDF for free.

The app is based on author Ernest Hemingway’s rules for writing. Either use it to write, or just copy-paste what you’ve written into Hemingway App. It’ll analyze the text and suggest improvements, like shortening complex sentences, removing adverbs, using active voice, and so on. Apply the suggestions and your unpolished text will sound like it was written by a pro! Just copy-paste it again to save or send it where you want.

Notes on Mac OS X and Google Docs online let you just start typing while auto-saving everything. Shrib is the no-signup version of that. Think of it as the always-saved notepad for the web. Just go to Shrib.com and start typing, it’ll save it.

This site is a series of online classes made by Redditors, across different categories like arts, science, philosophy, language, fun and games, etc. It’s a collation of the best, useful information on Reddit in one place, and it’s all completely free.

No, you don’t need to sign up. Yes, it supports almost every standard file you can think of — a total of 211 different formats, in fact. Yes, you can download files without needing to give them any details or your email address. It’s simply the best tool.

Maildrop lets you choose your own email handle or suggests one if you’re creatively stuck. You can even visit that email’s “inbox” at any time to access an activation link or any such confirmation email sent by the service you’re signing up for. It’s the most pain-free way to register with an email, while keeping your private email safe from spam.

Visit the site, write your worry when prompted, and watch and listen. Pixel Thoughts will turn it into a worry bubble that slowly drifts away, as it calmly puts things in perspective for you and lifts your spirits.

It works with JPEGs, PNGs, SVGs, and GIFs. It’s surprisingly powerful and saves several kilobytes or megabytes, depending on your original file size. Plus, a neat slider tool lets you check the difference in before and after shots of your image.

You can insert text and images, use a “freehand” tool to sign documents, add links, and even annotate with sticky notes. You can even add or remove pages. Once you’re done making changes, download the PDF to your hard drive again.

Let’s say you thought of the perfect name for your new startup. Before you rejoice, you should check if that name is taken as a .com or .me, as well as if it’s available on top social services on the web like Facebook, YouTube, Reddit, Instagram, Twitter, etc.

Namechk is the one portal to do it. Type in the name, hit Enter, and it’ll start searching all these sites to see if the desired username or domain name is taken or available. With one click, you can then go to those sites and book that name. It couldn’t get simpler. Heck, you might want to run through this before naming your baby too.

What’s Your Favorite No-Signup Tool?

I love the convenience of Imgur, where you can simply share an image without having to give any details to anyone, and use it often. Others on the MakeUseOf staff sing praises of Appear.in, regularly use vidme, and Reddit users are starting to love Gfycat for no-signup GIFs.

But I’m sure there are plenty of other cool web tools that require no registrations, which I’m completely unaware of. So share your recommendations and favorites in the comments below!

I understand getting annoyed too. But I totally understand. Don't let your "greed" let you be talked into "regulating" these sites. State-mandated regulations/control is merely the beginning of fascist control